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CULTURE: The Home of English Football's Most Ardent Fans? Uganda
By Evelyn Kiapi Matsamura
KAMPALA - It's a cold, wet Sunday evening outside the Little Highbury pub. Inside, patrons are glued to a huge television screen showing an eagerly awaited football match between two English Premier League teams: Arsenal and Chelsea.
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Human Rights? Racism? Cooperation? Inequality? Gender? Yes, you can talk about any of these things when discussing the most popular and possibly the most democratic of sports: football. Even about development, the environment, economics and health... As fans from around the globe settle in to watch the FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) World Cup 2006, played in stadiums across Germany June 9 to July 9, it is a propitious occasion to talk about the many aspects of globalisation, on and off the pitch.

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CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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THE WORLD CUP OF ZIDANE
by Eduardo Galeano
JULY 2006 (IPS) - Someone, I don't know who, summed up the 2006 World Cup as follows: The players behaved in an exemplary fashion. They didn't drink, they didn't smoke, they didn't play, writes Eduardo Galeano, Uruguayan writer and journalist and author of The Open Veins of Latin America and the trilogy Memories of Fire.

  FIFA
  FIFA World Cup 2006
  UN Sport for Development and Peace
  Unite for Children/Unite for Peace - UNICEF, FIFA

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